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Usage Information

Antineutrophil autoantibodies in Graves' disease. Implications of thyrotropin binding to neutrophils.
S A Weitzman, T P Stossel, D C Harmon, G Daniels, F Maloof, E C Ridgway
S A Weitzman, T P Stossel, D C Harmon, G Daniels, F Maloof, E C Ridgway
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Research Article

Antineutrophil autoantibodies in Graves' disease. Implications of thyrotropin binding to neutrophils.

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Abstract

The hyperthyroidism of Graves' disease may be caused by autoantibodies to thyrotropin (TSH) receptors. We have found that patients with this disease have autoantibodies to neutrophils as well, which can be displaced by TSH. Using a radiochemical opsonic assay, we found serum antibodies against homologous neutrophils in 6 of 11 Graves' patients. With a staphylococcal protein A-binding assay, we detected circulating antibodies to homologous neutrophils in 10 of 20 patients, while finding cell-bound antibody on autologous neutrophils in 7 of 8 (including 2 with negative serum tests). Use of human 125I-TSH in a radioligand binding assay revealed that TSH bound to neutrophils rapidly (maximum binding within 10 min at 22 degrees C, pH 7.4), specifically (less than 20% nonspecific binding), and reversibly. Adding TSH to the radiochemical assay resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of opsonic antibody activity in serum from patients with Graves' disease. In contrast, TSH did not inhibit antibody activity of serum from patients with immune neutropenia not associated with thyroid disease. Our findings suggest a basis for the association of Graves' disease with neutropenia. Furthermore, the discovery of such antineutrophil antibodies in Graves' disease permits detection of cell-bound antibody when free antibody is not present.

Authors

S A Weitzman, T P Stossel, D C Harmon, G Daniels, F Maloof, E C Ridgway

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Usage data is cumulative from June 2025 through June 2026.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 547 30
PDF 233 13
Scanned page 474 2
Citation downloads 159 0
Totals 1,413 45
Total Views 1,458
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Usage information is collected from two different sources: this site (JCI) and Pubmed Central (PMC). JCI information (compiled daily) shows human readership based on methods we employ to screen out robotic usage. PMC information (aggregated monthly) is also similarly screened of robotic usage.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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